Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- proper noun A
diminutive of the female given namesMargaret andMegan .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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In fact, an expression Meg might almost have described as regret flashed across Mrs. Wilson’s fleshy face before she said, I’ll not be sorry to see the back of that Roger, I can tell you.
All Shall Be Well Deborah Darden Crombie 1994
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In fact, an expression Meg might almost have described as regret flashed across Mrs. Wilson’s fleshy face before she said, I’ll not be sorry to see the back of that Roger, I can tell you.
All Shall Be Well Deborah Darden Crombie 1994
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In fact, an expression Meg might almost have described as regret flashed across Mrs. Wilson’s fleshy face before she said, I’ll not be sorry to see the back of that Roger, I can tell you.
All Shall Be Well Deborah Darden Crombie 1994
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' Amanda Terkel 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' Amanda Terkel 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' Amanda Terkel 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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Meg is the only candidate with a good plan to create jobs.
Meg Whitman's New Spanish-Language Ad: I 'Stood Up Against The Arizona Law' The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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